
Glass, F ,Y^y- 
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RATION OF THE JACKSOi STMOE, 



TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1875. 



Tv3 



GOV. KEMPER'S ADDRESS. 



My Couxtrymex: 

The oldest of the states has called together this great con- 
course of her sons and her daughters, with honored representatives of both the 
late contending sections of our common country. On this day, abounding with 
stern memories of the past and great auguries of the future, I come to greet 
you: and, in the name and by authority of Virginia, I bid you all and each 
welcome, a heart-warm welcome, to her capital. 

With a mother's tears and love, with ceremonies to be chronicled in her 
archives and transmitted to the latest posterity, tlie commonwealth- this day 
emblazons the virtues, and consecrates in enduring bronze the image, of her 
mighty dead. Not for herself alone, but for the sister states whose sons he 
led in war, Virginia accepts, and she will proudly preserve, the sacred trust 
now consigned to her perpetual custody. Not for the southern people only, 
but for every citizen of whatever section of the American republic, this tribute 
to illustrious virtue and genius is transmitted to the coming ages, to be cherished 
as it will be with national jsride as one of the noblest memorials of a common 
lieritage of glory. Nay, in every country and for all mankind, Stonewall 
• uickson's career of unconscious heroism will go down as an inspiration, teach- 
ing the power of courage and conscience and faith directed to the glory of God. 

As this tribute has sprung from the admiration and sympathy of kindred 
hearts in another continent; as the eyes of cliristendom have been turned to 
behold the achievements of the man; so will the heroic life here enshrined 
radiate back, to the remotest bounds of the world, the lessons its example has 
taught. 

It speaks to our fellow-citizens of the north, and, reviving no animosities of 
the bloody past, it commands their respect for the valor, the manhood, the 
integrity and honor of the people of whom this christian warrior was a repre- 
sentative type and champion. 

It speaks to our stricken brethren of the south, bringing back ins sublime 
simplicity and faith, nis knightly and incorruptible fidelity to each engagement 
of duty; and it stands an enduring admonition and guarantee that sooner shall 
the sun reverse its course in the heavens than iiis comrades and his compatriot 
people shall prove recr.eant to the parole and contract of honor which binds 
them, in the fealty of freemen, to the constitution and union of the states. 



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V 



^^';..5^'' 



2 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

It speaks with equal voice to every portion of the reunited common country, 
warning all that impartial justice and impartial right, to the north and to the 
south, are the only pillars on which the arch of the federal union can securely 
rest. 

It represents that unbought spirit of honor which ^Jrefers death to degrada- 
tion, and moi'e feels a stain than a wound; which is the stern nurse of freemen, 
the avenging genius of liberty, and which teaches and pi'oclaims th;lt the free 
consent of the governed is at once the strength and the glory of the govern- 
ment. 

It stands forth a mute protest before the world against that rule of tyrants 
which, wanting faith in the instincts of honor, would distrust and degrade a 
brave and proud but unfortunate people, which would bid them repent, in 
■order to be forgiven, of such deeds and achievements as heroes rejoice to per- 
form, and such as the admiration of mankind in every age has covered with 
glory. ■.*... 

Let the spirit and design, with which we. erect this memorial to-day, ad- 
monish our whole country that the actual reconciliation of the states must 
come, and, so far as honorably in us lies, shall come; but that its work will never 
be complete until the equal honor and equal liberties of each section shall be 
acknowledged, vindicated, and maintained by both. We have buried the 
strifes and passions of the past; we now perpetuate impartial honor to whom 
honor is due, and, stooping to resent no criticism, we stand with composure 
and trust ready to greet every token of just and constitutional pacification. 

Then let this statue endure, attesting to the world for us and our children, 
honor, homage, reverence for the heroism of our past,, and at the Same time 
the kn.ightliest fidelity to our obligations of the present and the future. 

Let it endure as a symbol of the respect which both the sections will accord 
to the illustrious dead of each, signifying, not that either will ever be prepared 
to apologize to the other, but that, while calmly differing as to the past, neither 
will defile its record, each will assert its manhood, its rectitude and its honor, 
and both will equally and jointly strive to consolidate the libfertyi.and the 
peace, the strength and the glory, of a common and indissoluble country. 

Let it endure as a perpetual expression of that world-wide sympathy with 
true greatness wh.ich prompted so noble a gift from Great Britain to Virginia; 
and let its preservation attest the gratitude of the commonwealth to those 
great-hearted gentlemen of England who originated and procured it as a tribute 
to the memory of her son. ^ 

Let this statue stand, with its mute eloquence to inspire our children with 
patriotic fervor, and to maintain the prolific power of the commonwealth in 
bringing forth men as of old. Let Virginia, beholding her past in the light of 
this event, take heart and rejoice in her future. Mother of states and sages 
and heroes! bowed in sorrow, with bosom bruised and wounded, with garments 
rent and rolled in blood, arise and dash away all tears! No stain dims your 
glittering escutcheon ! Let your brow be lifted up with the glad consciousness 
of unbroken pride and unsullied honor! Demand and resume complete pos- 
session of your ancient place in the sisterhood of states; and go forwai'd to the 
great destiny which, in virtue of the older and the later days, belongs to the 
co-sovereign commonwealth of Virginia. 

It is in no spirit of mourning, it is with the stern joy and pride befitting 
this day of heroic memories, that I inaugurate these ceremonies in the name of 
the people. 

The eulogist of the dead, the orator of the day, now claims your attention. 
He needs no encomium from me. 1 present him, the companion and friend of 
Jackson, the reverend man of God — Moses D. Hoge. 



f 



ORATION BY REV. MOSES D. HOGE, D. D. 



Were I permitted at this moment to,consult my own wishes, I would bid the 
thunder of the cannon and the acclamations of the j^eople announce the un- 
veiling of the statue ; and then, when with hearts beating with commingled 
emotions of love and grief and admiration, we had contemplated this last and 
noblest creation of the genius of the great sculptor, the ceremonies of this 
august hour should end. 

In attemi^ting to commence my oration, I am forcibly reminded of the falter- 
ing words with which Bossuet began his splendid eulogy on the Prince of 
Conde. Said he: ''At the moment I open my lips to celebrate the imihortal 
glory of the Prince of Conde I find myself equally overwhelmed by the great- 
ness of the theme and the needlessness of the task. What part of the habi- 
table world has not heard of his victories, and the wonders of his life ? Every- 
where they are rehearsed. His own countrymen in extolling them can give no 
information even to the stranger. And although I may remind you of them, 
yet everything I could say would be anticipated by your thoughts, and I should 
suffer the reproach of falling far below them.'" 

How true is all this to-day ! Not only is every important event in the life of 
our illustrious chieftain familiar to j^ou all, but what lesson to be derived from 
his example has not already been impressively enforced by those whose genius, 
patriotism, and piety have qualified them to speak in terms worthy of their 
noble theme? ' And now that the statesman and soldier, who well represents 
the honor of Virginia, as its chief magistrate, has given his warm and earnest 
welcome to our distinguished guests from other States, and from other lands, 
who honor this occasion by their presence, I would not venture to proceed 
had not the Commonwealth laid on me its command to utter some words of 
greeting to my fellow-countrymen who this day do honor to themselves in ren- 
dering homage to the memory of Virginia's illustrious son. 

I cannot repress an emotion of awe as I vainly attempt to overlook the 
mighty throng, extending as it does beyond the limits of these Capitol grounds, 
and covering spaces which cannot even be reached by the eye of the speaker. 
More impressive is this assemblage of citizens and representatives from all parts 
of our own and of foreign lands, than ever gathered on the banks of the ancient 
Alpheus at one of the solemnities which united the men of all of the Grecian 
States and attracted strangers from the most distant countries. There was indeed 
one i^leasing feature in the old Hellenic festivals. The entire territory around 
Olympia was consecrated to peace during their -celebration, and there even 
enemies might meet "as friends and brothers, and in harmony rejoice in their 
ancestral glories and national renown. It is so with us to-day. But how defi- 
cient in moral interest was the old Olympiad, and how wanting in one feature 
which gives grace to our solemnity. No citizen, no stranger, however honored, 
was permitted to bring with him either mother, wife, or daughter, but here to- 
day how many of the noble women of the land, of whom the fabled Alcestis, 
Antigone, and Iphigenia were but the imperfect types, lend the charm of their 
presence to the scene — Christian women of a nobler civilization than Pagan an- 
tiquity ever knew. 

We have come from the sea-shore, the mountains, and the valleys of our 
south-land not only to inaugurate a statue, but a new era in our history. Here 
on this Capitoline Hill, on this 26th day of October, 1875, and in the one hun- 



4 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

dredth year of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in sight of that historic river 
that more than two centuries and a half ago bore on its bosom the bark freighted 
with the civilization of the North American Continent, on whose banks Powha- 
tan wielded his sceptre and Pocahontas launched her skiff, under the shadow 
of that Capitol whose foundations were laid before the present Federal Consti- 
tution was framed, and from which the edicts of Virginia went forth over her 
realm that stretched from the, Atlantic to the Mississippi — edicts framed by 
some of the patriots whose manly forms on yonder monument still gather 
around him whose name is the purest in human history — we have met to. in- 
augurate a new Pantheon to the glory of our common mother. 

In the story of the empires of the earth some crisis often occurs which 
develops the genius of the era, and impresses an imperishable stamp on the 
character of a whole people. 

Such a crisis was the Eevolution of»1776, when thirteen thinly-settled and 
widely-separated colonies dai'ed to oflfer the gage of battle to the greatest mili- 
tary and naval power on the globe. 

The story of that struggle is the most familuir in American annals. After 
innumerable reverses, and incredible sufferings and sacrifices, our fathers came 
forth from the ordeal victorious. And though during the progress of the strife, 
before calm reflection had quieted the violence of inflamed passion, they were 
branded by opprobrious names and their revolt denounced as rebellion and 
treason, the justice of their cause, and the wisdom, the valor and the deter- 
mination with which they vindicated it, were quickly recognized and generously 
acknowledged by the bravest and purest of British soldiers and statesmen ; so 
that now, Avhen we seek the noblest eulogies of the founders of American re- 
publicanism, we find them in the writings of the essajasts and historians of the 
mother country. We honor ourselves, and do homage to virtue, when we 
hallow the names of those who in the council and in the field achieved such 
victories! We bequeath an influence which will bless coming generations, 
when with the brush and the chisel we perpetuate the images of our fathers 
and the founders of the state! Already has the noble office been begun. Here 
on this hill the forms of Washington, and Henry, and Lewis, and Mason, and 
Nelson, and Jefferson, and Marshall, arrest our eyes and make their silent but 
salutary and stirring appeals to our hearts. Nor are these all who merit eternal 
commemoration. As I look on that monument, I miss James Madison, and others 
'of venerable and illustrious name. Let us not cease our patriotic work, until 
we have reared a Pantheon worthy of the undying glory of the past! 

But this day we inaugurate a new era. We lay the corner-stone of a new 
Pantheon in commemoration of our country's fame. We come to honor the* 
memory of one who was the impersonation of our Confederate cause, and whose 
genius illumined the great contest which has recently ended, and which made 
an epoch not only in our own history, but in that of the age. 

We assert no monopoly in the glory of that leader. It was his happj^ lot to 
command, even while he lived, the respect and admiration of right-minded 
and right-hearted men in every part of this land, and in all lands. It is now 
his rare distinction to receive the homage of those who most differed with him 
on the questions which lately rent this republic in twain from ocean to ocean. 
From'the North, and from the South, from the East, and from the West, men 
have gathered on these grounds to-day, widely divergent in their views on 
social, political, and religious topics, and yet they find in the attraction which 
concentrates their regard upon one name, a place where their hearts unex- 
pectedly touch each other and beat in strange unison. 

It was this attractive moral excellence which, winning the love and admira- 
tion of the brave and pure on the other side of the sea, prompted them to 
enlist the genius of one of the greatest of modern sculptors in fashioning the 
statue we have met' to inaugurate this day. 

It is a singular and striking illustration of the world-wide appreciation of 
his character, that the first statue of Jackson comes from abroad, and that while 
the monument to our o\vn Washington, and the effigies of those who surround 
him, were erected by order of the commonwealth, this memorial is the tribute 
of the admiration and love of those who never saw his face and who were bound 



INAUOIIRATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 5 

to him by no ties save tliose wliieh a common sympathy for exalted wortli es- 
tablislies between the souls of magnanimous and heroic men. We accept this 
noble gift all the more gratefully because it comes from men of kindred 
race and kindred heart, as the expression of their good-will and sympathy for 
our people as well as of their admiration for the genius and chai'acter of our 
illustrious hero. 

We accept it as the visible symbol of the ancient friendship which existed in 
colonial times between Virginia and the mother country. We accept it as a 
prophecy of the incoming of British settlers to our sparsely populated territory, 
and hail it as a pleasing omen for the future that the rebuilding of our shat- 
tered fortunes should be aided by the descendants of the men who laid the 
foundations of this commonwealth. We accept it as a pledge of the peaceful 
relations which we trust will ever exist between Great Britain and the con- 
federated empire formed by the United States of America. 

In the first memorial discourse that was delivered after his lamented, death, 
the question was asked, "How did it happen that a man who so recently was 
known to but a small circle, and to them only as a laborious, punctilious, lium- 
ble-minded Professor in a Military Institute in so brief a space of time, gathered 
around his name so much of the glory which encircles the name of Napoleon, 
and so much of the love that enshrines the memory of Washington?" And 
soon after, in the memoir wdiich will go down to coming generations as the 
most faithful portraiture of its subject, and an enduring monument of the genius 
of its author, the inquiry was resumed, "How is it that this man of all others 
least accustomed to exercise his own fancy or address that of others, has stim- 
ulated the imagination not only of his own countrymen, but that of the civil- 
ized world? How has he, the most unromantic of great men, beconie the 
hero of a living romance, the ideal of an inflamed fancy, even before his life 
has been invested with the mystery of distance? " From that day to this, these 
inquiries have been propounded in every variety of form, and with an ever in- 
creasing interest. 

To answer these' questions will be one object of this discourse; and yet the 
public will not expect me in so doing, to furnish a new delineation of the life 
of Jackson, or a rehearsal of the storj^ of his campaigns. Time does not per- 
mit this, neither does the occasion demand it. By a brief series of ascending 
propositions, do I seek to furnish the solution. I find an explanation of the 
regard in which the memory of Jackson is cherished — 

.1st. In the fact that he was the incarnation of those heroic qualities which 
fit their possessor to lead and command men, and which therefore always at- 
tract the admiration, kindle the imagination, and arouse the enthusiasm of the 
people. 

There is a natural element in humanity which constrains it to honor that 
^vhich is strong, and adventurous, and indomitable. Decision, fortitude, iiiiiex- 
ibility, intrepidity, .determination, when consecrated to noble ends, and especially 
■when associated with a gentleness wliich throws a softened charm over these 
sterner attributes, ever win, and lead captive the popular heart. 

The masses who compose the commonalty, consciously weak and irresolute, 
instinctively gather around the men of loftier stature in whom they fintl the 
great forces wanting in themselves, and spontaneously follow the call of those 
whom they think competent to redress their wrongs and vindicate their rights. 

These are tlie leaders who are welcomed by the people with open arms, and 
elevated to the high places of the earth, to become the regents of society — to 
^levelop the history of the age in which they live, and to impress upon it the 
noble image of their own personality. 

As discoverers love to trace great rivei^s to their sources, so in our studies of 
the characters of those who have filled large spaces in the public eye, it inter- 
ests us to go backward in search of the rudimentary germs which afterwards 
developed into the great qualities which commanded the admiration of the 
world. 

Never was the adagd, "the child is the father of the man," more strikingly 
illustrated than in the early history of the orphan boy whose name subsequently 
became a tower of strength to the armies he commanded, and to the eleven 
sovereign states banded and battling together for a separate national life. 



6 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

« 

There is no more graphic picture on the pages of Macaulay than that of 
Warren Hastings, at the age of seven, lying on the bank of a rivulet which 
flowed through the broad lands which were once the property of his ancestors, 
and there forming the resolve that all that domain should one day be his, and 
never abandoning his purpose through all the vicissitudes of his stormy life, 
until, as the "Hastings of Daylesford," he tasted a joy which his heart never 
knew in the command of the millions over whom he ruled in the Indian emj^ire. 

But stranger still was it to see a pensive, delicate orphan child of the same age, 
the inheritor of a feeble constitution, yet with a w.ill even more indomitable than 
that of Warren Hastings, renouncing his home with a relative, who, mistaking 
his disposition, had attempted to govern him by force, and alone and on foot 
performing a journey of eighteen miles to the house of another kinsman, where 
he suddenly presented himsetf, announcing his unalterable resolve never to 
return to his former home— a decision whicli no remonstrances or persuasions 
could induce him to revoke; and stranger still to see him, the year after, on a 
lonely island of the Mississippi river, in company with another child a few 
years his senior, maintaining himself by his own labor, until driven by malaria 
from the desolate spot where beneath the dreary forests and beside the angry 
floods of the father of waters he had displayed the self-reliance and hardihood 
of a man, at a period of life when children are ordinarily scarcely out of the 
nursery. This inflexibility of purpose and defiance of hardship and danger in 
the determination to succeed, was displayed in all his subsequent career — 
whether we see him at West Point, overcoming the disadvantages of a deficient 
preliminary education by a severity of application almo?t unparalleled, in ac- 
cordance with the motto he inscribed in bold characters on a page in his com- 
mon place book,- " You may be whatever you resolve to be" — or whether we 
follow»him through the Mexican campaign, winning his first laurels at Cheru- 
busco, and at Chepultapec, where he received his second promotion — or whether 
we accompany him to his quiet retreat in Lexington, where, after the termina- 
tion of the Mexican war, he filled the post of Professor in the Military Insti- 
tute, and there affording a new exhibition of his detei-mination in overcoming 
obstacles more formidable than those encountered in the field, in the persistent 
discharge of "every duty in spite of feeble health and threatened loss of sight. 

I know of no picture in his life more impressive than that which presents 
him as he sat in his study during the still hours- of the night, unable to use 
book or lamp — with only a menial view of diagrams and models, and the arti- 
ficial signs required in abtruse calculations, holding long and intricate processes 
of mathematical reasoning Avith the steady grasp of thought, his face turned 
to the blank, dark wall, until he mastered every difficulty and made complete 
preparations for the instructions of the succeeding day. 

These years of self-discipline, and self-enforced severity of regimen, main- 
tained with rigid austerity, through years of seclusion from public life, consti- 
tuted the propitious season for the full maturing of those faculties whose energy 
was so soon to be displayed on a field, which attracted the attention of the 
world. 

When his native state, which had long stood in the attitude of magnanimous 
mediation between the hostile sections, in the hope of preserving the Union 
which she had assisted in forming, and to whose glory she had made such con- 
tributions, was menaced by the rod of coercion, and compelled to decide between 
submission or separation, then Jackson, who would have cheerfully laid down 
his life to avert the disruption, in accordance with the principles of the political 
school in which he had been trained, and which commanded his conscientious 
assent, hesitated no longer, but went straight .to his decision as the beam of 
light goes from its G.od to. the object it illumines. Simultaneously with the 
striking of the clock which announced the hour of his departure with his 
cadets for the Camp of Instruction in this city, the command to march was 
given. Never was there a home dearer than his own; but he left it, never* 
again to cross its threshold. From that time, as we are told, he never asked or 
received a furlough — was never absent from duty for d day, whether sick or 
well, and never slept one night outside the lines of his own command. Ai\d 
passing over a thousand occasions which the war aff'orded for the exercise of 



INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 7 

his uncouqiievable will, tliore is something impressive in the fact that in the 
very last order which ever fell from his lips, was a revelation of its unabated 
force. After he had received his fatal wound, while pale with anguish, and 
fixint with loss of blood, he was informed by one of his Generals that the men 
under his command had been thrown into such confusion that he feared he 
could not hold his ground, the voice which was growing tremulous and low, 
thrilled the heart of that ofiicer with the old authoritative tone, as he uttered 
his final order, "General, you must keep your men together, and hold your 
ground." 

These were the elements which' shaped Jackson's distinctive characteristics 
as a soldier and commander which may be most concisely stated; a natural 
genius for the art of war, without which no professional training will ever de- 
velop the highest order of military talent; a power of abstraction and self-con- 
centration which enabled him to determine every proper combination and dis- 
position of his forces, without the slightest mental confusion— even in those 
' supreme moments when his face and -form underwent a sort of transfiguration 
amid the llame and thunder of battle; a conviction of the moral superiority of 
aggressive over defensive warfare in elevating the courage of his own men and 
in depressing that of the enemy; an almost intuitive insight into the plans of 
the enemy, and an immediate perception of tlie time to strike the most stun- 
ning blow, from the most unlocked for quarter; a conviction of the necessity of 
following every such blow with another, and more terrible, so as to make every 
success a victory, and every victory so complete as to compel the speedy termi- 
nation of the war. 

In the county where all that is mortal of this great hero sleeps, there is a 
natural bridge of rock whose massive arch, fashioned with grace by the hand 
of God, springs lightly toward the sky, spanning a chasm into whose awful 
deptlis the beholder looks down bewildered and awe-struck. That bridge is 
among the cliffs what Niagara is among the waters — a visible expression of 
sublimity — a glimpse of God's great strength and power. 

But its grandeur is not diminished because tender vines clamber over its 
gigantic piers, or because sweet-scented fllowers nestle in its crevices, and warmly 
color its cold, gray columns. Nor is the granite strength of our dead chieftain's 
character weakened because in every throb of his heart there was a pulsation 
so ineffably and exquisitely tender, as to liken him, even amidst the horrors of 
war, to the altar of pity which ancient mythology reared among the shrines of 
strong and avenging deities. 

This admirable commingling of strength and tenderness in his nature is 
touchingly illustrated by a letter, now for the first time made public. 

An officer under his command had obtained leave of absence to visit a stricken 
household. A beloved member of his family had just died; another was 
seriously ill, and he applied for an extension of his furlough. This is the reply : 

"Mv Dear Major: 

"I have received your sad letter and wish I could relieve 
your sorrowing heart, but human aid cannot heal the wound. 

"From me you have a friend's sympathy, and I wish the suffering condition 
of our country permitted me to show it. But we must think of the living and 
of those who are to come after us, and see that, with God's blessing, we trans- 
mit to them the freedom we have enjoyed. What is life without honor? Beg- 
radation is .worse than death. It is necessary that you should be at your post 
immediately. Join me to-morrow mprning. 

"Your sympathizing friend, 

"THOMAS J. JACKSON." 

Not only was he sensitive, to every touch of human sorrow, but no man 
was ever more susceptible to impressions from the physical world. The 
hum of bees, the fragrance of clover-fields, the. tender streaks of dawn, the 
dewy brightness of the early spring, the mellow glories of the matured autumn, 
all, by turns 'charmed and tranquilized him. The eye that so often sent its 
lightning through the smoke of battle, grew soft in contemplating the beauty 



8 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

of a flower. The ear that thrilled with the thunder of the cannonade drank 
in with innocent delight the song of birds, and the prattle of children's voices. 
The hand which guided the rush of battle on the plains of Manassas and the 
Malvern hills was equally ready to adjust the covering around the tender frame 
of a motherless babe, when at midnight he rose to see if it was comfortable 
and warm, though its own father was a guest under his roof. The voice whose 
sharp and ringing tones had so often uttered the command, "Give them the 
bayonet," culled even from foreign tongues terms of endearment for those he 
loved which his own language diil not adequately supply; and the man who 
filled two hemispheres with the story of his fame was never so happy as when 
he was telling the colored children of his Sabbath-school the story of the cross.. 

2. Another explanation of the universal regard with which his memory is hal- 
lowed, conducts to a higher plane, and enables us to contemplate a still nobler 
phase of his character. His was the greatness whicli comes without being 
sought for its own sake — the unconscious greatness which results from self- 
sacrifice and supreme' devotion to duty. Duty is an altar from which a vestal 
flame is ever ascending to the skies, and he who stands nearest to that flame 
catches most of its radiance, and in that light is himself made luminous forever. 

The day after the first battle of Manassas, and before the history of that vic- 
tory had reached Lexington in authentic form, rumor, jireceding any accurate 
account of that event, had gathered a crowd around the post-oftice awaiting with 
intensest interest the opening of the mail. In its distribution the first letter 
V7as handed to the Rev. Dr. White. It was from General Jackson.. Recogni- 
zing at a glance the well-known superscription, the Doctor exclaimed to those 
around him, "Now we shall know all the facts." 

This was the bulletin: 

" My Dear Pastor : 

"In my tent last night, after a fatiguing day's service, I 
remembered that I had failed to send you my contribution for our colored 
Sunday school. Enclosed you will find my pheck for that object, which please 
acknowledge at your earliest convenience, and oblige 

"Yours, faithfully, 

"TITOS. J. JACKSON." 

Not a word about the conflict which had "electrified a nation! Not an allusion 
to the splendid part he had taken in it: not a reference to himself, beyond the 
fact that it had been to him a fatiguing day's service. And yet that was the 
day ever memorable in his history — memorable in all history — when he received 
the name which is destined to supplant the name his parents gave him — Stone- 
wall Jackson. When his brigade of twenty-six hundred men had for hours with- 
' stood the iron tempest which broke ujion it without causing a waver in its line, 
and when on his right, the forces under the command of the gallant General 
Bee had been overwhelmed in the rush of resistless numbers, then was it that 
the event occurred which cannot be more graphically described than in the 
burning words of his biographer : 

"It was then that Bee rode up to Jackson, and with despairing bitterness 
exclaimed, 'General, they are beating us back.' 'Then,' said Jackson, calm 
and curt, 'we will give them the bayonet.' Bee seemed to catch the inspiration 
of his determined will, and galloping back to the broken fragments of his over- 
taxed command, exclaimed, 'There is Jackson, standing like a stone wall. 
Rally behind the Virginians! ' At this trumpet-call a few score of his men re- 
formed their ranks. Placing himself at the head, he charged the dense mass 
of the enemy, and in a moment fell dead with his face to the foe. From that 
time, Jackson's was known as the Stonewall Brigade — h, name lienceforth immor- 
tal, and belonging to all the ages; for the christening was baptized in the blood 
of its author; and that wall of brave hearts was on every battle-field, a stead- 
fast bulwark of their country." 

The letter written to his pastor in Lexington on the day following that battle 
gives the key-note to his character. Nor on any occasion was he the herald of 
his own fame; never, save by the conscientious discharge of duty, did he aid 



INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 9 

in the dissemination of that fame. Never did he perform an act for the sake 
of what men might say of it; and while he felt all the respect for puhlic opinion 
to which it is justly entitled, ho was not thinking of what the public verdict 
might be, But of wliat it was right to do. Tlie attainment of no personal ends 
could satisfy asi^irations like his. To' ascertain what was true, to do what was 
best, to fill. up the narrow measure of life with the largest possible usefulness, 
was his single-hearted purpose. In such a career, if enjoyment should come, 
or well-earned fame, or augmented influence, or the power which accompanies 
promotion, they must all come as incidents by the. way, as satellites which 
gather around a central orb, and not as the consummation toward which he 
ever tended. This singleness of aim was inseparable from a soul so sincere. 
A nature like his was incapable of employing the meretricious aids by which 
some men seek to heighten or advance their reputation. 

Hence he never affected mystery. His reticence was not the assumption of 
impenetrability of purpose. His reserve was not the artifice of one who seeks 
to awe by making himself unapproachable. He hedged himself about with no 
barrier of exclusiveness. He assumed no airs of portentous dignity. He 
studied no dramatic effects. On the field, so far from condescending to those 
histrionic displays of person, or theatrical arts of speech, by which some com- 
manders have sought to excite the enthusiasm of their armies, when his troops 
caught the sight of his faded uniform and sun-burnt cap, and shook tlie air with 
tiieir shouts as he rode along the lines, he quickened his gallop and escaped 
from view. When among the mountain pyramids, oldev than those to which 
the first Na])oleon pointed, he did not remind his men that the centuries were 
looking down on them. When on the plain, he drilled no eagles to perch on 
his banners, as the third Napoleon was said to have done. But one thing he did, 
he impressed his men with such an intense conviction of his unselfish and 
supreme consecration to the cause for which he had perilled all, and so kindled 
theip with his own magnetic fire, as to fuse them into one articulated body — 
one heart throbbing through all the members, one spirit animating the entire 
frame — that heart, that spirit, his own. It was his sublime indifference to per- 
sonal danger^to personal comfort and personal aggrandizement — that gave him 
such power over the armies he commanded, and such a place in the hearts of 
the people of the Confederate States. 

The true test of attachment to any cause is what one is willing to suffer for 
its advancement, and it is the spectacle of disinterested devotion to the right 
and true at the cost of toil, and travail, and blood, if need be, that caj^tivates 
the popular heart, and calls forth its admii'ation and sweetest affection. He 
who exhibits most of this spirit is the man who unconsciously wins for himself 
enduring fame. When he passes from earth to a higher and diviner sphere his 
influence does not perish. It is not the transient brilliance of the meteor, but 
the calm radiance of a star whose light undimmed and undiminished comes 
down to kindle all true and brave souls through immeasureable time. Exalted 
by the disinterested works he has wrought, by his example he elevates others, 
and thus becomes the trellis, strong and high, on which other souls may stretch 
themselves in the pursuit of whatsoever is excellent in human character and 
achievement. . 

Such a man was Jackson. Such is the recognition of him beyond the sea of 
which this statue is the token. Such is our appreciation of his claim upon our 
gratitude — upon our undying love — in testimony of which we gather around 
this statue to-day, and crown it with the laurel, first moistened by our tears. 

3. But this universal sentiment of regard for his memory rests upon founda- 
tions which lie still deeper in the human heart. At the mention of his name 
another idea inseparably associated with it, invariably asserts its place in the 
mental portraiture which all men acquainted with his history have formed of 
him, and so I announce as the third and last exiilanation of the homage 
awarded him, the sincerity, the purity, and the elevation of his character as a 
servant of the Most High God. 

No one acquainted with the moral history of the world can for a moment 
doubt that religious veneration is at once the profoundest and most universal 
of human instincts: and however individual men mav chafe at the restraints 



10 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

which piety imiDOses, or be indifferent to its oblig.ations, yet there is a senti- 
ment in the popular heart which compels its homage for those whose character 
and lives most faithfully reflect the beauty of the Divine Image. 

When a man already eminent by great virtues and services, attains great 
eminence in piety and wears the coronal of Heaven on his brow, because the 
spirit of Heaven has found its home in his heart, then the world, involuntarily, 
or with hearty readiness, places him on a higher pedestal, because with their 
love and admiration for the attractive qualities of the man, there is mingled a 
veneration for the ennobling graces of the Christian. 

I do not agree with those who ascribe all that was admirable in the character 
of Jackson and all that was splendid in his career, to his religious faith. He 
was distinguished before faith became an element in his life, and even after his 
faith attained its fullest development, it did not secure the triumph of the 
cause to which his life yvus a sacrifice. 

But this I saj^, that his piety heightened every virtue, gave direction and 
force to every blow he struck for that cause, and then consecration to the sac- 
rifice when he laid down his life on the altar of his country's liberties. He was 
purer, stronger, more courageous, more efficient because of his piety ; purer, 
because. penitence strains the soul of the corrugations which defile it; stronger, 
because faith nerves the arm that takes hold on omnipotence; more courageous, 
because hoj^e gives exaltation to the heroism of one who fights with the crown 
of life ever in view ; more efficient, because religion which is but another name 
for the right use of one's own faculties, preserves them all in harmonious bal- 
ance, develops all in symmetrical proportion, and by freeing them from the 
warping power. of prejudice, the blinding power of passion, and the debasing 
slavery of evil habits, gives them all wholesome exercise, trains them all to 
keep step to the music of duty, and inspires them with an energy which' is both 
intense and rightly directed. 

It was thus that he gave to the world an illustration of the power which re- 
sults from the union of the loftiest human attributes and unfaltering faith in 
God. 

To attempt, therefore, to portray the life of .Jackson while leaving out the 
religious element, would be like undertaking "to describe Switzerland without 
making mention of the Alps" — or to explain the fertility of the land of the 
Pharaohs without taking into account the enriching Nile. 

If what comes from the speaker to-day on this subject loses aught of its force 
because it is regarded as professional, he will deeply regret it. The same testi- 
mony might have more weight from the lips of many a statesman or soldier on 
these grounds to-day, but it would not be a whit more true. Sturdy old Thomas 
Carlyle, at all events, was not speaking professionally when he said: "A man's 
religion is the chief fact with regard to him.'" "The thing a man does practi- 
cally lay to heart concerning his vital relation to this mysterious universe, and 
his duty and destiny there, i/iat is in all cases the primary thing for him, and 
determines all the rest." 

It was surely the primary fact — the supreme fact in the history of General 
Jackson; and I cannot leave the subject without adding that those who con- 
found his faith in Providence with fatalism, mistake both the spiritual history 
of the man, and the meaning of the very words they employ. 

Those who imagine that his faith savored of bigotry do not know that one 
characteristic of his religion was its generous catholicity, as might well be in- 
ferred from the fact that the first spiritual guides whose instructions he sought 
were members of communions widely different in doctrine and polity ; that when 
he connected himself with the church of his choice it was with doubts of the 
truth of some of its articles of doctrine — doubts ultimately and utterly re- 
moved, indeed, but openly avowed while they possessed him; that nothing so 
rejoiced his heart, during the progress of the war, as the harmony existing be- 
tween the various denominations represented in the army; that in selectin^g his 
personal staff, and in recommending men for promotion, merit was the sole 
ground, and their ecclesiastical relations were never even considered; that 
with a charity which embraced all who held the cardinal truths of revelation, 
he ardently desired such a unity of feeling and concert of action among all the 



INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 11 

followers of the same Divine Leader as would constitute one spiritual army^ 
glorious and invincible. 

It is refreshing too to note, that at this tlay, when political economists aban- 
don the weaker races to the law of natural selection, and contemplate with 
complacency the process bj^ which the dominant races extir])atc the less capable, 
he sought to place tlie gentle but strong and sustaining liTind of Christianity 
beneath the African population of the South, and so arrest the operation of 
that law by developing them, if possible, into a self-sustaining people. 

It is still more refreshing to note that at this da}^, when scientific men assert 
such an unvarying uniformity in the operations of the laws of nature as to dis- 
credit prophecy, and deny miracle and silence prayer, that he whose studies 
had lain almost exclusively in the realm of the exact sciences, was a firm be- 
liever in the supernatural. Well did this humble pupil in the school of the 
Great Teacher — this diligent student in the school of physical science — know 
that true progress was not meraadvance in inventions and in arts, or in sub- 
sidizing the forces of nature to human uses, but th<it true progress was the pro- 
gress of man himself — man, as distinct from anything external to himself. 
Well did he know that there is a celestial as well as a terrestrial side to man's 
nature, and that, although the temple of the body has its foundation in the 
dust, it is a temple covered by asdome which opens ujjward to the air and the 
sunlight of Heaven, through which the Creator discloses Himself as the goal of 
the soul's aspirations — as the ultimate and imperishable good which satisfies its 
infinite desires. Those were true and brave words of the British Premier 
when he said, '"Society has a soul as well as a body; the traditions of a nation 
are a part of its existence; its valor and its discipline, its religious faith, its 
venerable laws, its science and its erudition, its poetry^ its art, its eloquence 
and its scholarship, are as much a portion of its existence as its agriculture,, 
its commerce, and its engineering skill." 

. The death of every soldier who fell in our Confederate war is a protest against 
that Base jihilosophy "which would make physical good man's highest good, and 
which would attempt to rear a noble commonwealth on mere material founda- 
tions.," Every soldier who ofl^ers his life to his country, demonstrates the supe- 
riority of the moral to the physical, and proclaims that truth, and right, and 
honor, and liberty are nobler than. animal existence, and worth the sacrifice, 
even when blood is the offering. 

And now we recognize the Providence of God in giving to this faithful ser- 
vant the illustrious name and fame as a leader of armi'es, which brought the 
Very highest development of his character to the notice of the world. It was 
his renown as a soldier of the country which made him known to men as a sol- 
dier of the cross. And since nothing so captivates the popular heart, or so 
kindles its enthusiasm as military glory, Providence has made even that sub- 
servient to a higher purpose. Men cannot now think of Jackson without asso- 
ciating the prowess of the soldier with the piety of the man. Thus his great 
military renown is the golden candlestick, liolding high the celestial light which 
is seen from afar and cannot be hid. 

Such was the man who was second in command in our Confederate armies, 
and whose success as a leader during the bright, brief career allotted to him, 
was second to that of no one of his illustrious comrades in arms. 

And yet the cause to which all this valor was consecrated, and for which all 
these sacrifices were made, was not destined to triumpli. And here, perhaps, 
we learn one of the most salutary lessons of this wonderful history. 

Doubtless all men wlio have ever given their labors and affections to anj' 
cause fervently hope to be the witnesses of its assured triumph. Nor do I deny 
that success makes the pulses of enterprise beat faster and fuller. Like tJie 
touch of the goddess, it transforms the still marble into breathing life. But 
yet all history, sacred and profane, is filled with illustrations of the truth, that 
success, 'and especially contemporary success, is not the test of merit. Our own 
observation in the world in which we move proves the same truth. Has not 
popular applause ascended like incense before tyrants who surrendered their 
lives to the basest and most degrading passions? Have not reproach and perse- 
cution, and poverty and defeat, been the companions of noble men in all ages, 



12 INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE, 

who have given their toils and blood to great causes ? Are they less noble 
because they were the victims of arbitrary power, or because an untoward gene- 
ration would not appreciate the grand problems which they solved, or because 
they lived in a generation which was not worthy of them ? 

If we now call the, roll of the worthies who have given to the world its valued 
treasures of thought or faith, or who have subdued nature or developed art, it 
will be found that nearly all of them were in a life-long grapple with defeat 
and disaster. Some, and amongst them those whose names shine the brightest, 
would have welcomed neglect as a boon, but instead, endured shame and 
martyrdom. 

Other things being equal, the tribute of our admiration is more due to him, 
who, in spite of disaster, pursues the cause which he has espoused, than to one 
who requires the stimulus of the applause of an admiring public. We are sure 
of a worthy object when we give our plaudits to the earnest soul who has fol- 
lowed his convictions in the midst of peril and disaster because of his faith in 
them. 

It is well that even every honest effort in the cause of right and truth is not 
always crowned with success. Defeat is the discipline which trains the truly 
heroic soul to further and better endeavors. And if these last should fail, and 
he can do battle no more, he can lay down his armor with the assurance that 
others will put it on, and in God's good time vindicate the truth in whose be- 
half he had not vainly spent his life. 

Our people since the termination of the war have illustrated the lessons 
learned in the school of adversity. Having vindicated their valor and endur- 
ance during the conflict, they have since exhibited their jjatience and self con- 
trol under the most trying circumstances. Their dignity in the. midst of pov- 
erty and reverses, their heroic resignation to what they could not avert, have 
shown that subjugation itself could not conquer true greatness oF soul. And 
by none Jiave these virtues been illustrated more impressively than by theyete-' 
rans of the long conflict, who laid down their arms at its closeand mingled 
again with their fellow-citizens, distinguished from the rest only by their supe- 
rior reverence for law^, their patient industry, tlieir avoidance of all that n'kight 
cause needless irritation and provoke new humiliations, and their, readiness to 
regard as friends in peace, those whom they -had so recently resisted as enemies 
in war. 

The tree is known by its fruits. Your Excellency has reminded us that our 
civilization should be judged by the character of the men it has produced. If 
our recent revolution had been irradiated by the lustre of but the two names — 
Lee and Jackson — it would still have illumined one of the brightest pages in 
history. 

I have not spoken of the former to-day; not because my heart was not full 
of him, but because the occasion required me to speak of another, and because 
the day is not distant when one more competent to do justice to his great theme 
than I have been to mine, will address another assembly of the men of the 
South, and North, and West, upon these Capitol grounds, when our new Pan- 
theon will be completed by the erection of another monument, and the inaugu- 
ration of the statue of Lee, with his generals around him, amid the tears and 
gratulations of a countless multitude. 

It was with matchless magnanimity that these two great chieftains delighted 
each to contribute to the glory of the other. Let us not dishonor ourselves by 
robbing either of one leaf in the chaplet which adorns their brows; but, catch- 
ing the insjjiration of their lofty example, let us thank God that he gave us two 
such names to shine as binary stars in the firmament above us. 

It was in the noon-tide of Jackson's glory that he fell; but what a pall of 
darkness suddenly shrouded all the land in that hour. If anj'' illustration were 
needed of the hold he had acquh-ed on the hearts of our people, on the hearts 
of the good and brave and true throughout all the civilized world, it would be 
found in the universal lament which went up everywhere when it was an- 
nounced that Jackson was dead — from the little girl at the Chandler house, 
who "wished that God would let her die in his stead, because then only her 
mother would cry; but if Jackson died, all the people of the country would 



INAUGURATION 0¥ THE JACKSON STATUE. 13 

cvy " — from this humble chiKl up to the Commandor-in-ciiief, who wept as only 
the strong and brave can weep, at the tidings of his fall : from tlie weather- 
beaten sea-captain, wlio had never seen his face, but who burst into loud, un- 
controllable grief, standing on the deck of his vessel, with his rugged sailors 
around him wondering what had happened to break that heart of oak, up to 
the English earl, honored on both sides of the Atlantic, who exclaimed, when 
the sad news came to him, "Jackson was in some respects the greatest man 
America ever produced." 

The impressive ceremonies of the hour will bring back to some here present 
the memories of that day of sorrow, when at the firing of a gun at the base of 
yonder monument, a procession began to move to the solemn strains of the Dead 
March in .Saul — the hearse on which the dead hero lay, preceded by a portion of 
tlie command of General Pickett, whose funeral obsequies you have just cele- 
brated, and followed by a mighty throng of weeping citizens, until, having 
made a detour of the city, it paused at thfe door of the capitol, when tlio body 
was borne within by reverent hands and laid on an altar erected beneath the 
dome. 

The congress of the. Confederate States had adopted a device for their flag, 
and one emblazoned with it had just been completed, which was intended to 
be unfurled from the roof of the capitol. It never fluttered from the height it 
was intended to grace. It became Jackson's winding-sheet. Oh! mournful 
prophecy of the fate of the Confederacy itself! 

The military authorities shrouded him in the white, red, and blue flag of the 
Confederacy. The citizens decked his bier with the white, red, and blue flowers of 
spring until they rose liigh above it, a soft floral pyramid; but the people every- 
where embalmed him in their hearts with a love sweeter than all the fragrance 
of spring, and immortal as the verdure of tlie trees under which lie now rests 
by the river of life. 

And where in all the annals of the world's sorrow for departed worth, was 
there such a pathetic impersonation of a nation's grief, as was imbodied in the 
old mutilated veteran of Jackson's division, who, as tlie shades of evening fell, 
and when the hour for the closing of the doors of the capitol came, and when 
the lingering throng was warned to retire, was seen anxiously pressing through 
the crowd to take his last look at the face of his beloved leader. " They told 
him he was too late; that they were closing up the coflin for the last time; that 
the order had been given to clear the hall. He still struggled forward, refusing 
to take a denial, until one of the marshals of the day wa* about to exercise his 
authority to force him back; uj^on this the old soldier lifted the stump of his 
right arm toward the heavens, and with tears running down his bearded face, 
exclaimed, 'By this arm, which I lost for my country, I demand the jirivilege 
of seeing my general once more ! ' Such an appeal was irresistible, and at the 
instance of the Governor of the commonwealth, the pomp was arrested until 
this humble comrade had also dropped his tear upon the face of his dead 
leader." 

Your Excellency did well to make the path broad which leads through these 
capitol grounds to this statue, for it will be trodden by the feet of all who visit 
this city, whether they come from the banks of the Hudson, the Mississippi, or 
the Sacramento; whether from the Tiber, the Rhine, or th'e Danube. 

Tender though they be, cold and sad are the closing lines of Collins in his 
ode to the memory of the brave whose rest is hallowed by feheir country's ben- 
edictions, depicting as they do, honor coming as "a pilgrim gray," and freedom 
as a "weeping hermit" repairing to the graves of departed heroes. 

Not so will Honor come to this shrine, not as a worn and weary pilgrim, but 
as a generous youth .with burnished shield and stainless sword, and heart beat- 
ing high in sympathy for the right and true, to lay his mail-clad hand on this 
altar and swear eternal fealty to duty and to God. 

Nor will Freedom for a time only repair to t^^is hallowed spot, but here she 
will linger long and hopefully, not as a weeping hermit, but as a radiant divinity 
conscious of immortality. 

It is true that memories unutterably sad have at times swept through this 
mighty throng to-day, but we are not here to indulge in reminiscences only, 



14 . INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE. 

much less in vain regi-ets. We have a future to face, and in that future lies not 
only duty, and trial perhaps, but also hope. 

For when we ask what has become of t»he principles in the defence of which 
Jackson imperilled and lost his life, then I answer: A form of government may 
change, a policy may perish, but a j^rinciple can never die. Circumstances may 
so change as to make the application of the principle no longer possible, but its 
innate vitality is not affected thereby. The conditions of society may be so al- 
tered as to make it idle to contend for a principle which no longer has any 
practical force, but these changed conditions of society have not annihilated 
one original truth. 

The application of these postulates to the present situation of our country is 
obvious. The people of the South maintained, as their fathers maintained before 
them, that certain principles were essential to the perpetuation of the Union 
according to its orginal constitution. Rather than surrender their convictions, 
they took up arms to defend them. The aj^peal was vain. Defeat came, and they 
accepted it, with its consequences, just as they would have accepted victory with 
its fruits. They have sworn to maintain the government as it is now constituted. 
They will not attempt again to assert their views of state sovereignty by an ap- 
peal to the sword. None feel this obligation to be more binding than the sol- 
diers of the late Confederate armies. A soldier's parole is a sacred thing, and 
the men who are willing to die for a principle in time of war, are the men of 
all others most likely to maintain their personal honor in time ^ peace. 

But it is idle to shut our eyes to the fact that this consolidated empire of states is 
not the Union established by our fathers. No intelligent European student of 
American institutions is deceived by any such assumption. AVe gain nothing 
by deceiving ourselves. 

And if history teaches any lesson, it is this, that a nation cannot long survive 
when the fundamental principles which gave it life, originally, are subverted. 
It is true republics have often degenerated into despotisms. It is also true that 
after such transformation they have for a time been chai-acterized by a force, a 
prospei"ity, and a glory never known in their earlier annals, but it has always 
been a force which absorbed and obliterated the rights of the citizen, a prosper- 
ity which was gained by the sacrifice of individual independence, a glory which 
was ever the precursor of inevitable anarchy, disintegration, and viltimate ex- 
tinction. 

If then it be asked hotv are we to escape the catastrophe, I answer by a vol- 
untary return to the fundamental principles upon which our republic was orig- 
inally founded. And if it be objected that we have already entered upon one. 
of those political revolutions which never go backward, then I ask, who gave 
to any one the authority to say so ? or whence comes the infallibility which en- 
titles any one to pronounce a judgment so overwhelming? Why may there 
not be a comprehension of what is truly politic, and what is 'grandly right, 
slumbering in the hearts of pur American people — a people at once so practical 
and emotional, so capable of great enterprise and greater magnanimity — -a pa- ' 
triotism which is yet to awake and announce itself in a repudiation of all un- 
constitutional invasion of the liberties of the citizens of any portion of this 
broad Union? When we remember the awful strain to which the principles of 
other constitutional governments have been subjected in the excitement of 
revolutionary epochs, and how, when seemingly submerged by the tempest, 
they have risen again and re-asserted themselves in their original integrity, why 
should we despair of seeing the ark of our liberties again resting on the summit 
of the mount, and hallowed by the benediction of Him who said, "Behold, I 
do set my bow in the cloud?" 

And now standing before this statue, and as in the living presence of the 
man it represents, cordially endorsing, as I do, the principles of the political 
school in which ne was trained and in defence of which he died, and unable 
yet even to think of our de#l Confederacy without memories unutterably ten- 
der, I speak not for myself, but for the South, when I say it is our interest, our 
duty and determination to maintain the Union, and to malce every possible 
contribution to its prosperity and glory, if all the states which compose it will 



INAUGURATION OF THE JACKSON STATUE, 15 

unite in making it such a Union as our fathers framed, and in enthroning above 
it, not a Cf^sar, but the Constitution in its old supremacy. 

If ever these states are welded together in one great fraternal, enduring 
Union, with one heart pulsating through the entire frame as the tides throb 
through the bosom of the sea, it willbe when they all stand on the same level, 
with such a jealous regard for each other's rights that when the interests or 
honor of one is assailed, all the rest feeling the wound, even as the body feels 
the pain inflicted on one of its members, will kindle with just resentment at 
the outrage, because an injury done to a part is not only a wrong but an indig- 
nity offered to the whole. But if that cannot be, then I trust the day will 
nevei' dawn when the Southern 2">eople will add degradation to defeat and 
hypocrisy to subjugation by professing a love for the Union which denies to one 
of their states a single right accorded to Massachusetts or New York — to such 
a Union we will never be heartily loyal while that bronze hand grasps its 
, sword — while yonder river chants the requiem of the sixteen thousand Confed- 
erate dead who, with Stuart among them, sleep on the hills of Hollywood. 

But I will not end- my oration with an anticipation so disheartening. I can 
not so end it because I look foi-ward to "the future with more of hope than of 
despondency. I believe in the perpetuity of republican institutions, so far as 
any work of man may be said to possess that attribute. The complete emanci- 
pation of our constitutional liberty must come from other quarters, but we 
have our part to perform, one requiring patience, prudence, fortitude, faitli. 

A cloud of witnesses encompass us. The bronze figures on these monuments 
seem for the moment to be replaced by the spirits of the immortal men whose 
names they bear. 

As if an angel spoke, their tones, thrill our hearts. 

First, it is the calm voice of Washington that we hear: "Of all the disposi- 
tions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion ahd nwrality are in- 
dispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism 
who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firm- 
est p)rops of the duties of men and citizens." 

Then, Henry's clarion notes arouse us: "Liberty, the greatest of all earthly 
blessings: give us that precious jewel, and you may take all the rest!" 

Then Jefferson speaks : " Fellow-citizens, it is proper you should understand 
what I deem the essential principles of government. Equal and exact justice 
to all men of whatsoever state or persuasion, religions or jjolitical. The support 
of state governments in all their rights as the surest bulwarks against anti-re- 
publican tendencies; the preservation of ■ the general government in its whole 
constitutional vigor as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad ; 
the supremacy of the civil over military authority; the honest payment of our 
debts and sacred preservation. of the public faith. And should we wander from 
these principles in moments of error and alarm, let us hasten to retrace our 
steps, and to regain the road which alone leads to peace, liberty, and safety." 

And last, it is Jackson's clear ringing tone to which we listen : 

"What is life without honor? Degradation is worse than death. We must 
think of the living and of those who are to come after us, and see that by 
God's blessing we transmit to them the freedom we have enjoyed.'" 

Heaven ! hear the prayer of our dead, immortal hero ! ' 



INSCRIPTIOISI ON THE PEDESTAL. 



^ Presented by Englisli gentlemen 
as a tribute of admiration for 
* the soldier an'd patriot 

THOMAS J. JACKSON: 

and gratefully accepted by Virginia 
in the name of the Southern people. 



Done A. D. 1875 
in the hundredth year of the commonwealth. 

'■^ Look! there is Jackson, standing like a stonewalV 



LB Jo ^10 



